New York hasn’t even been awarded the 2014 Super Bowl yet, but the Big Apple already is getting blasted by skeptics and the disgruntled in advance of tomorrow’s historic vote.

Despite some of the most memorable championship games in NFL history being played in brutal weather and at least one Super Bowl being held in cold worse than what New Meadowlands Stadium might feel in mid-February four years from now, the idea of an open-air Big Game in the Northeast is being ridiculed.

Conspiracy theories also abound as New York’s competitors for Super Bowl XLVIII grumble about too much influence from NFL commissioner Roger Goodell causing the owners to unfairly coronate the joint Giants-Jets bid over Tampa and South Florida.

“Super Bowl race appears to be rigged for N.Y.” screamed the headline in yesterday’s Tampa Tribune.

The newspaper called New York’s bid “the worst idea since Dustin Hoffman and Warren Beatty [filmed] ‘Ishtar” ‘ and said, “Unless reason prevails . . . NFL owners [are] about to be led down a slushy path by a commissioner determined to reward New York for building a new home for the Giants and Jets.”

Some owners (but not nearly enough to deny New York’s bid) have balked at the prospect of a New York “Snow Bowl,” and the Jets are even facing opposition from within. Last week, Gang Green wideout Santonio Holmes — a South Florida native — said he is adamantly against the idea.

But no one from New York’s bid is running from the possibility of terrible weather in mid-February — in fact, they’re reveling in it.

The Giants and Jets are playing up the chance of snow by saying it would make the game unique, despite the hardships on fans and sponsors already paying $1,000 face value for a Super Bowl ticket.

What Tampa and New York’s critics are overlooking is that 40- and 50-degree temperatures at the Meadowlands in mid-February — while admittedly rare — are not out of the question.

If that happens, it would be roughly on par with the mid-50s kickoff temperature in Jacksonville, Fla., five years ago for the Patriots’ 24-21 win over the Eagles in Super Bowl XXXIX.

And cold weather is hardly an unknown in Super Bowl history. It’s not unthinkable that the Meadowlands could be warmer than New Orleans was on Jan. 16, 1972. That’s when the Cowboys beat the Dolphins in Super Bowl VI at open-air Tulane Stadium in temperatures that were 39 degrees at kickoff — still the coldest Big Game on record — and got colder throughout the day.

The 1972 game and subsequent outdoor Super Bowls in the 1970s played in the 40s and low 50s helped to prompt the league to create a policy mandating that the Big Game couldn’t be played in temps below 50 degrees.

The owners made New York an exception to that rule in this case and are expected to make it official with tomorrow’s vote.